Saskatoon receives an average of 2,363 hours of sunlight per year.
It depends on the time of year
The Sahara receives 3,000 to 4,000 hours of bright sunlight each year. Most of the Sahara only receives around 0.79 inches of rain annually.
Death Valley receives an average of about 4,019 hours of sunlight per year, making it one of the sunniest places in the United States.
That would depend on where the giraffe lives and what time of the year it is.
1812h/year
The annual average sunlight hours vary greatly among states in the US. Generally, states in the Southwest region receive the most sunlight hours per year, with Arizona and Nevada averaging around 3,800 hours. States in the Pacific Northwest and Northeast typically receive fewer sunlight hours, with Washington and Oregon averaging around 2,000 hours per year.
Assuming you mean Norway: Parts of Norway are within the arctic circle. That means that the hours of sunlight can vary anywhere between 0 and 24 hours, depending on the time of year.
North of the Antarctic Circle, geographies experience a mix of hours of sunlight and hours of no sunlight. At the Antarctic Circle, there is at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset per year. At the Equator, these periods are about 12 hours each.
It changes from day to day throughout the year. But when averaged over the entire year, it averages out to 12 hours per day.
The equator gets 12 hours of sunlight every day of the year (this only refers to the actual equator, not the Tropics in general, though sunlight doesn't vary much at the low latitudes either).
Tropical regions receive more hours of sunlight in a year compared to polar regions. This is because polar regions experience periods of continuous darkness in winter, known as polar night, while tropical regions generally have more consistent daylight throughout the year.